149 Mo. App. 656 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
This is a suit for damages accrued to plaintiff on account of personal injuries received through the alleged negligence of defendant. Plaintiff recovered and defendant appeals.
Defendant conducts a large department store in the city of St. Louis and it appears plaintiff was in its employ, having charge of the employees’ wraps in the wrap room on the second floor of the store. Upon concluding work on the day of her injury, plaintiff discovered some one had left a lady’s hat and coat in the wrap room. It was her duty to turn those articles over to defendant’s night watchman for safe keeping before quitting the store. With this purpose in view, .plaintiff took the hat
The evidence tends to prove that the passageway from the cloak room and the stairway as well had always theretofore been lighted by electricity. It appears the stair, instead of passing down straight, turned at right angles about one-half way between the second and the first floors. An arc light had theretofore been maintained near the ceiling of the second floor immediately adjacent to the stairway and a small electric light had been maintained adjacent to the wall at the turn in the stair. These two lights afforded abundant light in aid of those passing up or down the stairs.
Plaintiff says on the evening in question, though the lights were burning in the wrap room of which she had charge, they were not burning in the passageway nor at the stair when she passed from the wrap room to convey the articles mentioned to the watchman on the first floor. She says the passageway from the wrap room to the stair was unlighted and that she felt her way along the wall through the darkness for a distance of ninety feet to the stair; that upon approaching the stair, which was dark, as both the arc lamp above it and the smaller lamp at the turn beneath were unlighted, she was precipitated forward down the stairway to her injury while in the act of feeling for the first step with her right foot and with her hand against the wall. As to why the lights in the passage and stairway were not burning does not appear; that they had been burning an hour before that time is not questioned,,for plaintiff herself testifies that at o :30 o’clock she passed the same and the lights were aglow.
There can be no doubt that it was defendant’s duty to exercise ordinary care to furnish plaintiff a reasonably safe place to work and this involves as well the exercise of ordinary care on its part to furnish a reasonably safe way of ingress and egress to and from the place of work. [Strobel v. Gerst Bros. Mfg. Co., 148 Mo. App. 22, 127 S. W. 421; Labatt on Master and Servant, sec. 100a]. When obstructions, stairways or pitfalls in the master’s building are to be encountered in passing to and from the place of work, the same principle, of course, devolves upon the master the duty to exercise ordinary care to the end of sufficiently lighting the way of ingress and egress for the purpose of enabling the servant to enjoy a reasonable degree of safety while passing to and from the place of work. It is entirely clear that it was defendant’s duty to exercise ordinary care toward maintaining lights at the stairway until the plaintiff and other employees had quit the service for the day. [Labatt on Master and Servant, sec. 105; Dorney v. O’Neill, 34 N. Y. App. Div. 497.] And, indeed, such is a personal duty of the master which he may not escape by delegating it to another, for it pertains to his obligation in respect of a safe plape. [Labatt on Master and Servant, secs. 540, 541; English v. Roberts, Johnson & Rand Shoe Co., 145 Mo. App. 439, 122 S. W. 747.] If it appeared defendant had wholly omitted to supply any means of lighting the stairway and plaintiff came to her injury as a result of that fact,
It is very true that the law does not require positive and direct proof as to the fact of negligence but it is nevertheless essential for plaintiff by her proof to indicate clearly that her injury resulted from some negligent act on the part of the master. [Labatt on Master and Servant, secs. 835, 836.] It is true the law is satisfied in this respect when the proof made furnishes a reasonable inference of negligence on the part of defendant. But if an inference of negligence is relied upon, as in this case, plaintiff is required to show that the injury is more naturally to be attributed to a cause which exists because of defendant’s negligence than to one which may exist without it. [Labatt on Master and Servant, sec. 836.] In this respect, plaintiff’s evidence falls short of affording the inference essential, for it no more points the fact that defendant turned off the lights or caused such to be done than it points they were extinguished from some cause without its knowledge or consent.
As before stated, defendant can be liable to respond for plaintiff’s hurt on either of two hypotheses of negligence only: First, on its appearing that defendant turn
The lights were aglow at 5:30 o’clock and not a word in plaintiff’s proof indicates what caused them to cease to burn nor how long the condition of darkness prevailed. For turning off the lights itself, defendant would be liable, irrespective of the question of notice, because, in so doing, it breached its positive duty to exercise ordinary care for plaintiff’s safety; not so, however, if they were extinguished by a cause over which defendant had no control, for then its liability would depend entirely upon it appearing it had either actual or constructive notice of the interruption. In such circumstances, the breach of duty on defendant’s part consists not solely in permitting it to be dark on the stairway but consists instead in permitting the darkness to
But it is argued for plaintiff even though her evidence in chief is insufficient to support the verdict the case is aided by that introduced for defendant. Defendant, having introduced proof after the court refused to direct a verdict for it, thereby waived its right to insist upon the insufficiency of plaintiff’s case alone, provided it aided the matter by giving proof of essential facts for her on its part. It will therefore be essential to examine such portions of defendant’s evidence as are invoked by plaintiff. [Klockenbrink v. St. Louis & M. R. R. Co., 172 Mo. 678, 72 S. W. 900.] On behalf of defendant its superintendent testified that the night watchman had full charge of turning the electric lights on and off after about 6:00 o’clock in the evening and further that' there were several switches on the second floor by which the lights in question could be turned on and off. The night watchman testified for defendant that he was on the second floor about 6:30 and passed from there downstairs to one of the exits of the store on the first floor where he stood at the time plaintiff received her injury. There can be no doubt that plaintiff and defendant’s night watchman were not fellow-servants. This is especially true in view of the fact the watchman was charged with the duty of turning on and off the lights, for, this matter, pertaining as it does to a reasonably safe place, is a non-delegable duty which the law enjoins upon the master and for the breach of which he may not escape by giving its performance into the hands of an employee. [English v. Roberts, Johnson & Rand Shoe Co., 145 Mo. App. 439, 122 S. W. 747.] From the facts last stated and the proposition
But it is said if it may not be inferred from the fact the watchman was on the second floor at 6:30 o’clock that he turned off the lights in question it may be inferred he knew the darkness then prevailed there for the reason plaintiff testified it was about 6:30 when she was injured, and it is argued that notice to the watchman as to this matter was notice to the defendant for the reason the watchman is a vice principal in respect of this non-delegable duty of the master. The argument suggested requires further notice of the evidence. Plaintiff testified that her day’s work concluded at 6:30 o’clock in the evening and it was immediately after concluding her labors she was injured because of the ab
There is naught in the case from which it may be inferred the watchman turned off the lights to the exclusion of the idea that they were off from some other cause and that defendant either knew or might have known the fact in time to have relighted them before plaintiff’s injury. The judgment should be reversed. It is so ordered.